Absolutely. The CDC recommends that everyone 6 months of age and older get a flu vaccine. That message is especially important for cancer patients, because if they get the flu, their risk of getting severe complications is higher, due to their weakened immune system.

Flu shots are safer than FluMist, the nasal vaccine approved for healthy people ages 2 to 49. FluMist contains live, albeit weakened, flu virus, while flu shots contain killed virus, which can’t make you sick. (Some people run a low-grade fever after getting a flu shot, but that’s a sign your body is making antibodies against the disease, not a symptom of the flu itself.) If you’re over 65, the CDC recommends that you get the Fluzone High-Dose shot, which spurs the aging immune system to produce more antibodies against the flu. The CDC has not yet recommended that younger people with weakened immune systems, such as cancer patients, also get the high-dose vaccine.

What about survivors who have been cancer-free for a long time?

People who’ve had leukemia or lymphoma, which are cancers of the immune system, are most at risk for complications from the flu. Another group of survivors who have an elevated risk of complications from the flu are those who were treated with certain chemotherapy drugs that could alter their immune system long-term.

But if your immune system is compromised, does the flu vaccine work as well?

Getting a flu shot is better than not getting a flu shot, although it might not work as well as in a healthy person. If you do contract the flu after getting immunized, chances are you won’t get as sick as someone who hadn’t received a flu shot.